I do not. Aesthetics are far too vital for me, when it comes to my guns.

Thank you, thank you, Holly !

I might have bought a Glock in a moment of weakness, way back when. After all, an engineer is supposed to value function over form.
But, then I thought about it overnight, and I realized that as a single person, I don't make love to my kitchen appliances either.

I'm working in Atlanta, GA this week on business (I'm in law enforcement) and we're right here by Smyrna, GA where they're assembled. Although I have shot several in my line of work, I do not own one personally. I've gone the SIG route just simply because I like the way they feel better than the Glocks. As a matter of fact yesterday my partner and I took a drive over to Smyrna Police Distributors and he actually ended up buying a Glock model 35 Gen 4 in .40 S&W. A nice gun, just not for me.

Shooting, teaching other how to properly use a polymer handgun, home defense, in the garage. There are many reasons to own one most of them are good reasons.

RCG

I believe that shooting skills are transitive.
I taught Jean to shoot with one of my full-size .45s, with the full expectation that the skills she learned would transfer easily and with little added coaching to the use of any other pistol she could choose.
My belief proved true, as I knew it would, and I observed as Jean quickly acclimatized to her S&W Airweight Bodyguard revolver and her Kel-Tec P3AT.